Public Sector
organisations that award a Framework Agreement for longer than four years or who
award a “Contract” rather than a Framework Agreement to circumvent the
four-year limit for awarding Agreements are generally in breach of Regulation
33 of The Public Contracts Regulations 2015, if the reason for the award of
the Framework Agreement or Contract is out of the scope of the regulations.
It is considered
commercial good practice for the public sector obligations to be followed by
the private sector, although there is no compulsion to follow the advice, as commercial
best practice dictates that an organisation’s Framework Agreements and
Contracts should be reviewed regularly to ensure financial resources are used
efficiently and effectively.
Framework Agreements
and Contracts awarded within the public sector are governed by Regulation 33 of
The Public Contracts Regulations 2015, which states that:
- (1)
Contracting authorities may conclude framework agreements, provided that they
apply the procedures provided for in this Part.
- (2)
In these regulations, “framework agreement” means an agreement between one or
more contracting authorities and one or more economic operators, the purpose of
which is to establish the terms governing contracts to be awarded during a
given period, in particular with regard to price and, where appropriate, the
quantity envisaged.
- (3)
The term of a framework agreement shall not exceed four years, save in
exceptional cases duly justified, in particular by the subject matter of the
framework agreement.
- (4)
Contracts based on a framework agreement shall be awarded in accordance with
the procedures laid down in this regulation.
Regulation 33 (4)
states that Contracts must be awarded in accordance with Regulation 33, which
indirectly disallows Contracts from being awarded for a period of longer than
four years.
Contracts are
typically drawn off a Framework Agreement in the form of Purchase Orders, which
define a known value and volume of products or services to be purchased within
a set period. A Purchase Order and the Framework Agreement combined becomes a
separate and distinct Contract in its own right, meaning that several
contracts may be drawn from a Framework Agreement over its duration.
A Contract that does
not define a known and specific value and volume of products or services to be
purchased within a set period, even though designated and named as a
“Contract”, is merely a “Framework Agreement” by default and is not a Contract.
The Public Contracts
Regulations 2015 do allow Framework Agreements and Contracts to be awarded for
periods of longer than four years, but only in defined circumstances, such as:
- Within
monopoly supply markets.
- Where
markets have limited Suppliers.
- For
Capital Works projects that are longer than four years.
- To
allow Suppliers a return on investment for capital equipment.
However, the Utilities
Contracts Regulations 2016, Concessions Contracts Regulations 2016 and the
Defence and Security Public Contracts Regulations 2011 generally allow for more
extended Agreements within each respective area of public procurement.
All UK public
procurement regulations are expected to be amalgamated into the “Procurement
Bill”, due mid-2024, which allows for eight-year Framework Agreements, with
Suppliers appointed to the Framework “refreshing” their rates utilising open competitive
procedures within the term of the Agreement. Only Suppliers with the most competitive
“refreshed” rates will be able to retain their position on the Framework.
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